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PMP400 and PTP200 User Guide Issue 2
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1. 6 2 4 Equipment Disposal Waste Disposal X of Electronic and Electric SS a Please do not dispose of Electronic and Electric Equipment or Electronic and Electric Accessories with your household waste In some countries or regions collection systems have been set up to handle waste of electrical and electronic equipment In European Union countries please contact your local equipment supplier representative or service center for information about the waste collection system in your country 6 2 5 EU Declaration of Conformity for RoHS Compliance Motorola hereby declares that these Motorola products are in compliance with the essential requirements and other relevant provisions of Directive 2002 95 EC Restriction of the use of certain Hazardous Substances RoHS in electrical and electronic equipment Issue 2 September 2008 Page 35 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement The relevant Declaration of Conformity can be found at http Awww canopywireless com doc php 6 2 6 Luxembourg Notification 5 4GHz products can only be used for mobile services 6 2 7 Czech Republic Notification 5 4 GHz products can be operated in accordance with the Czech General License No GL 30 R 2000 6 2 8 Greece Notification The outdoor use of 5470 5725MH2 is under license of EETT but is being harmonized according to the CEPT Decision ECC
2. Supplement to the Canopy System Release 8 User Guide PMP 400 Series Networks PTP 200 Series Bridges Release 8 4 3 Issue 2 September 2008 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement Notices See important safety notice on exposure distance in Section 6 3 on page 37 See important regulatory and legal notices in Section 2 on page 6 Trademarks Product Names and Service Names MOTOROLA the stylized M Logo Canopy and all other trademarks indicated as such herein are registered trademarks of Motorola Inc Reg US Pat amp Tm Office MOTOwi is a trademark of Motorola Inc All other product or service names are the property of their respective owners 2008 Motorola Inc All rights reserved http www motorola com canopy Issue 2 September 2008 Page 2of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement Table of Contents 1 Introduction 2 Product Description 3 4 5 6 Regulatory and Legal Notices List of Tables Table 1 Products and Model Numbers e 6 Table 2 Performance Details 7 Table 3 Channel Center Frequencies by Region 12 Table 4 Control Slot Settings 5 Table 5 Release 8 4 Operation based on Region Code Table 6 US FCC IDs and Industry Canada Certification Numbe
3. WARNING Installing an AP or a BH usualy involves height and electricity and exposure to RF Radio Frequency energy To avoid personal injury Know and follow applicable national and local safety regulations and industry best practices and follow the specific guidelines in this document including Exposure Separation Distances in section 6 3 on page 37 5 1 INSTALLING AN AP WITH ITS KITTED ANTENNA This section addresses installation aspects specific to the PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series AP General communications equipment infrastructure and facilities site design should be performed in line with Motorola s Standards and Guidelines for Communications Sites also known as the R56 manual available trom bttp hwww motorola wis com Dynamic Course_Description asp number NTOO1 CD amp Courseke The AP ships either as a kit consisting of a connectorized antenna and a connectorized radio or just the connectorized radio with the antenna provided by the operator These instructions focus on the former case but are also generally applicable to the latter case for APs SMs or BHs where the antenna is purchased separately by the operator A short coaxial cable from the radio terminates in a male N connector The antenna has a chassis mounted female N connector The antenna includes tower mount brackets with adjustable down tilt Installing an AP typically consists of 4 phases 1 Configuring the AP in a depot or
4. 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement Figure 9 Ground lug highlighted on AP Unlike standard Canopy APs the PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series AP have metal to metal contact from the tower or support structure through the antenna through the coax cable to the radio Due to this to provide the best protection from near lightning hits itis strongly recommended to install surge suppression at the AP The 600SSC surge suppressor replaces earlier surge suppressors and supports up to three 600SSCs on an Ethernet link in series for example a 600SSC within 3 ft 1 m of an AP another 600SSC where the Ethernet cable enters a telecommunications hut and the equivalent of a 600SSC built into each of the 8 ports on a CMM4 A pole mount kit Model No SGHNS169A is available to facilitate mounting the 600SSC close within 3 ft or 1 m of the AP The CMMmicro uses a different protection scheme and and up to 3 600SSCs can be used in line on Ethernet links terminated to the CMMmicro 5 2 INSTALLING AN SM OR BH WITH AN INTEGRATED ANTEANNA Installing an SM or BH with an integrated antenna is very similar to installing standard Canopy SMs as described in the Canopy System Release 8 User Guide with the differences outlined below Use an SMMB2 SM mounting bracket not an SMMB1 typically used with standard Canopy SMs The PMP 400 Series SM or the PTP 200 Series BH is heavier and has a higher w
5. 6 3 EXPOSURE SEPARATION DISTANCES To protect from overexposure to RF energy install Canopy radios so as to provide and maintain the minimum separation distances from all persons shown in Table 8 ble 8 Exposure Separation Distances Module Type Separation Distance from Persons PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series OFDM AP or SM At least 20 cm approx 8 in Canopy Module for comparison Atleast 20 cm approx 8 in Section 6 3 1 and Table 9 give details and discussion of the associated calculations 6 3 1 Details of Exposure Separation Distances Calculations and Power Compliance Margins Limits and guidelines for RF exposure come from US FCC limits for the general population See the FCC web site at hitp www foc gov and the policies guidelines and requirements in Part 1 of Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations as well as the guidelines and suggestions for evaluating compliance in FCC OET Bulletin 65 Health Canada limits for the general population See Safely Code 6 on the Health Canada web site at http www he se go ca ewh semt pubs radiation 99ehd dhm237 index_e html Issue 2 September 2008 Page 37 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement ICNIRP Intemational Commission on Non lonizing Radiation Protection guidelines for the general public See the ICNIRP web site at hlio www icniro de
6. 4 7 NETWORK CONTROL PARAMETERS Network control parameters are configured the same as they are in standard Canopy These include High Priority DiffServ NAT DHCP VLAN MIR and CIR MIR and CIR are configured the same way as in standard Canopy but the operator may or may not want to take advantage of the higher MIR possible to provide greater bandwidth to a given SM 48 FORWARD ERROR CORRECTION PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series adios use FEC Forward Error Correction to extend the range of the modules They use Reed Solomon error correction optimized at 3 4 coding The coding rate is not settable by the operator 4 9 CYCLIC PREFIX CONFIGURABLE ONLY ON BH OFDM technology uses a cyclic prefix where a portion of the end of a symbol slot is repeated at the beginning of the symbol slot to allow multi pathing to settle before receiving the desired data A 1 4 cyclic prefix means that for every 4 bits of throughput data transmitted an additional bit is used A 1 8 cyclic prefix means that for every 8 bit of throughput data transmitted an additional bit is used PMP 400 Series networks use a cyclic prefix of 1 4 that is not configurable by the user PTP 200 Series modules OFDM BHs are settable for either 1 8 or 1 4 cyclic prefix The use of 1 8 cyclic prefix provides about 11 higher maximum throughput and is recommended in most cases The Cyclic Prefix is set on the Configuration gt Radio page of the BHM Issue 2 September 2008 P
7. MHz United States FCC IC DFS No effect 5480 5710 Canada FCCIIC DFS No effect 5480 5595 5655 5710 Europe ETSIDFS ETSIDFS 5475 5595 5655 5715 Brazil ETSI DFS No effect 5475 5715 Australia FCCIIC DFS No effect 5480 5595 5655 5710 Russia NA NA 5480 5710 Other No effect No effect 5480 5710 1 In all cases set the Region Code to the region you are in and the equipment will provide DFS consistent with that regions s regulations For countries or regions not listed use a Region Code that provides DFS functionality and channels consistent with your country s regulatory Issue 2 September 2008 Page 19 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement 5 4 GHz Region Code Center Channel AP sm Frequencies Available MHz requirements 2 in some countries and regions 5600 MHz to 5650 MHz is notched out to meet requirements to not transmit in weather radar frequencies 8 FCC IC indicates compliance with FCC Report and Order 03 287 and Industry Canada requirements 4 ETSI DFS indicates compliance with ETSI EN 301 893 v1 3 1 Atter an AP or BHM with DFS boots it performs a channel availability check on its main carrier frequency for 1 minute monitoring for the radar signature without transmitting If no radar signature is detected during this minute the module then proceeds to norma
8. 5710 Europe 5475 5595 5655 5715 US FSK for comparison 5495 5705 Canada FSK for comparison 5495 5575 5675 5705 The best practice for channel planning for APs is to conduct extensive site RF surveys before choosing channels The PMP 400 Series For those with the equipment and expertise use commercial and industrial spectrum analysis equipment The PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series APs and SMs do not provide a spectrum analyzer in the first release planned for a subsequent release but standard 5 4 GHz FSK SMs can be used to give useful information on the RF environment in the planned PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series AP deployment location 3 2 DOWNTILT The standard AP antenna produces a 3 db beam elevation up and down of 5 with near in null fil that allows good coverage of close in SMs that otherwise would be affected by the narrow pattern This is a narrower pattern than operators may be used to with standard Canopy s 60 dB beam and may require downtit on the antenna The standard antenna has provision for Issue 2 September 2008 Page 120f41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement measured downtit The operator should estimate downtit based on antenna height above the service area and using one of the many radio analysis and mapping tools or on line calculation tools for calculating downtilt 3 3 WEATHER RADAR Spectrum betwe
9. a 600SSC surge suppressor a successor to the 3008S and 600SSB surge suppressors provides over voltage and over current protection to APs SMs and BHs in various configurations 21 TECHNOLOGY AND BENEFITS These radios automatically selects QPSK Quadrature Phase Shift Keying 16 QAM Quadrature Amplitude Modulation or 64 QAM based on RF environment to provide 1X 2X and 3X operation respectively This provides 3 speeds and a throughput af aver 20 Mbps aggregate sum of up plus down compared FSK Canopy products with 2 speeds and a throughput of up to 14 Mbps The OFDM radios feature lower receive sensitivity FEC Forward Error Correction and higher antenna gain all of which combine to provide longer range within regulatory specified EIRP Equivalent Isotropic Radiated Power Details on performance are listed in Table 2 on page 11 The PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series radios use an OFDM physical layer with 10 MHz channels and 256 sub carriers Due to the different carrier and modulation schemes between these OFDM radios and FSK Canopy radios the two do not interoperate over the air For example an OFDM SM cannot connect to an FSK AP 2 1 1 NLOS and nLOS Benefits and Limitations The use of OFDM technology will help in many cases of NLOS Non Line of Sight and nLOS near Line of Sight nLOS links LOS Line of Sight means the installer can see the AP from the SM and the first Fresnel zone is clear An example of nLOS is when the
10. a radar signature on a frequency and locked out that frequency it may connect to a different AP or BHM if color codes AP BHM transmitting frequencies and SM BHS scanned frequencies support that connection To simplify operation and ensure compliance an SM or BHS takes on the DFS type of the AP it is registering to For example when an SM in Europe registers to an AP with the Region Code set to Europe that SM will use ETSI DFS no matter what its Region Code is set to even if its Region Code is set to None Note the operator should still configure the Region Code in the SM correctly as future releases may use the Region Code for additional region specific options General Status For all modules running DFS the module displays its DFS state on its Home page as one of the following Checking Channel Availability Remaining time n seconds where n counts down from 60 to 1 Normal Transmit Radar De from 30 to 1 cted si ing for n minutes where n counts down op Transmi Issue 2 September 2008 Page 20 0f 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement e Idle only for SM or BHS indicates module is scanning but has not detected a beacon from an AP or BHM Once it detects beacon the SM or BHS begins a Channel Availability Check on that frequency 4 4 2 Setting DFS and Regulatory Param
11. and the user enters a Downlink Data of greater than 85 the module will reset the Downlink Data to 85 Suggested Control Slot settings as a function of number of SMs in the sector are shown in Table 4 Generally all APs in a cluster should use the same number of control slots so as to keep the frame structures and thereby the send and receive timing the same Table 4 Control Slot Settings Number of SMs that Number of Control Register to the AP Slots Recommended 11010 o 111050 1 51 to 150 2 151 10200 3 In some cases operators may find that sectors with high levels of small packet requests such as might be seen in a sector handling several VoIP streams benefit overall from slightly higher Control Slot settings If different sectors require different numbers of Control Slots the operator should use the Frame Calculator to find a combination of settings that put Rec SEQ Start times within 300 bit times See section 3 5 2 on page 14 for details Control Slots are reserved for SMs bandwidth requests and never handle data A higher number of control slots gives higher probability that an SM s bandwidth request will be heard when the system is heavily loaded but with the tradeoff that sector capacity is reduced by about 100 kbps for each Control Slot configured so there will be less capacity to handle the request Uplink Data Slots are used first for data but if not needed for data in a given frame can be used by the
12. antenna Using the two bolts provided 4 Assemble the lower bracket on the antenna assembly Although it may seem intuitive to attach both brackets to the tower or pole and then hang the antenna it usually works better to have the bottom bracket already attached to the antenna before climbing 5 Weatherproof the connector using standard practices with waterproof wrap Issue 2 September 2008 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Page 28 of 41 Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement 6 Use standard work and ay polices fot 8 Connect the lower bracket tower climbing and 7 Hang the antenna assembly to the pole or tower using cornea the Upper on the upper bracket the quick connect system bracket to a pole eae mounting fixture or the tower 9 The quick connect system allows easy attachment and detachment and adjustment without any lose parts Issue 2 September 2008 Page 29 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement 10 Adjust downtilt as desired per previous calculations done during Planning If any doubts confirm downtilt after the radio is operational using SMs in the field at selected test locations end of procedure Procedure 3 Cabling and Grounding Earthing the AP 1 Standard Canopy install
13. at the job site using the information and decisions from section 3 Planning and section 4 Configuring 2 Assembling the AP radio and antenna and brackets and physically installing it using Procedure 2 along with physically installing a CMMmicro or CMM4 and backhauls if any 8 Cabling the AP to the CMMmicro or CMM4 and grounding it to Protective Earth PE using Procedure 3 This phase can also include cabling to backhauls or running terrestrial feeds 4 Confirming operation using SMs on the ground Local practices and choices of installation options will dictate the actual processes used For example installing on a building requires somewhat different procedures Also operators may use their own procedures to attach one or more APs to a pipe mount while on the ground and then lift the assembled unit up a tower for final attachment These generalized procedures will not be applicable in every case but should give good insight into the steps necessary Issue 2 September 2008 Page 27 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement Procedure 2 Assembling the AP and attaching to tower 1 Perform a parts check to ensure all parts are present 2 Assemble the upper bracket per the diagram that comes with the antenna 3 Connect the radio to the antenna by sliding it into the captive space Secure the radio to the
14. data than if they were running at 3X Similar to standard Canopy PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series modules may see reduced total throughput when handling traffic with a high percentage of small packets The effect of this again similar to standard Canopy is that at any given instant total throughput depends on Mix of links running at 3X 2X and 1X Mix of packet sizes 3 5 COLLOCATION WITH STANDARD 5 4 GHZ CANOPY FSK When locating 5 4 GHz PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series OFDM APs near 5 4 GHz standard Canopy FSK APs especially on the same tower but also in the same geographical area the following practices should be followed to avoid interference between the two systems Plan spacing between OFDM and FSK channels to provide 25 MHz center spacing which gives a 10 MHz guard band between the 10 MHz OFDM channel and the 20 MHz FSK channel Coordinate Downlink Data Range and Control Slot settings using both the OFDM and the FSK frame calculators The following paragraphs give more details on these recommended practices 3 5 1 Channel Spacing Center spacing of 25 MHz between collocated FSK and OFDM APs provides a 10 MHz guard band between the 20 MHz and 10 MHz channels which has proven useful and needed in field testing Alternatively in cases where channel planning is severely restricted and the 10 MHz guard band 25 MHz spacing is not possible using vertical separation of 5 feet or more between Issue 2 September 2008 Pag
15. energy Exposure to the sides and back of the module will be significantly less They meet sustained exposure limits for the general population not just short term occupational exposure limits with considerable margin The calculated compliance distance dis overestimated because the far field equation models the antenna as a point source and neglects the physical dimension of the antenna Issue 2 September 2008 Page 38 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement 64 LEGAL NOTICES 6 4 1 Software License Terms and Conditions ONLY OPEN THE PACKAGE OR USE THE SOFTWARE AND RELATED PRODUCT IF YOU ACCEPT THE TERMS OF THIS LICENSE BY BREAKING THE SEAL ON THIS DISK KIT CDROM OR IF YOU USE THE SOFTWARE OR RELATED PRODUCT YOU ACCEPT THE TERMS OF THIS LICENSE AGREEMENT IF YOU DO NOT AGREE TO THESE TERMS DO NOT USE THE SOFTWARE OR RELATED PRODUCT INSTEAD RETURN THE SOFTWARE TO PLACE OF PURCHASE FOR A FULL REFUND THE FOLLOWING AGREEMENT IS A LEGAL AGREEMENT BETWEEN YOU EITHER AN INDIVIDUAL OR ENTITY AND MOTOROLA INC FOR ITSELF AND ITS LICENSORS THE RIGHT TO USE THIS PRODUCT IS LICENSED ONLY ON THE CONDITION THAT YOU AGREE TO THE FOLLOWING TERMS Now therefore in consideration of the promises and mutual obligations contained herein and for other good and valuable consideration the receipt and sufficiency of wh
16. lightning PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series modules do not display a jitter value Use Received Power Level for aiming and then use Link Tests to confirm similar to standard Canopy practice Be mindful when using the Receive Power Level that itis a relative not absolute value The Receive Power Level on a module is useful during installation to aid in aiming where relative values over a short period of time are of interest However the displayed Receive Power Level is not designed to be highly accurate over time Even if the actual received power is not varying the displayed Receive Power Level will vary with board level temperature and may vary from module to module Know the limitations and use caution and judgment for any other use of Receive Power Levels including monitoring a link over time deciding if the link is within operating margins deciding if a link is serviceable link tests give a much better indication or comparing the link to other links The alignment headset will play a tone that varies in pitch received power level but not volume iter since PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series modules don t calculate a jitter Issue 2 September 2008 Page 32 0f 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement 6 Regulatory and Legal Notices 61 IMPORTANT NOTE ON MODIFICATIONS Intentional or unintentional changes
17. or modifications to the equipment must not be made unless under the express consent of the party responsible for compliance Any such modifications could Void the user s authority to operate the equipment and will void the manufacturer s warranty 62 NATIONAL AND REGIONAL REGULATORY NOTICES 6 2 1 U S Federal Communication Commission FCC Notification The FCC has not approved these devices for operation in the US Until they are approved they are not available for sale in the US and the information in this section is provisional and preliminary This device complies with Part 15 of the US FCC Rules and Regulations Operation is subject to the following two conditions 1 This device may not cause harmful interference and 2 This device must accept any interference received including interference that may cause undesired operation This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device pursuant to Part 15 of the US FCC Rules These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmtul interference in a residential installation This equipment generates Uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and if not installed and used in accordance with these instructions may cause harmful interference to radio communications If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception which can be determined by turning the equipment on and off the user is encourag
18. roundtrip Products available with either DES or AES encryption Table 2 shows performance details for the PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series system with the standard Canopy 5 4 GHz FSK details shown for comparison Issue 2 September 2008 Page 10 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement Table 2 Performance Details Performance Det Product Parameters 1x x ax Modulation apsk i6aaM 64QAM Typical Maximum Range SmiBkm 25 mi km 1 25 mi2 km S4GHZOFDM 10MHz Typical Maximum Aggregate 7 3 A yona Masili Aap 7Mbps 14mbps 20 Mbp Nominal Receive Sensitivity 99 gam ais aaa Neti rece godam 78d8m 70 dB Modulation 2level FSK 4level FSK none Typical Maximum Range 2 mmi8 2km 1mil 6km none 5 4 GHz FSK 20 MH bis 2 for comparison Z Typical Maximum Aggregate 2 aa Ps upe down Throughput 7 Mops 14 Mp Nominal Receive Sensitivity 86d8m 70d8m none Issue 2 September 2008 Page 11 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement 3 Planning PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series systems use a 10 MHz channel size configurable on 5 MHz Centers This channel size along wih some diferent characteristics due fo the use OFDM carrier technology and QPSK 16 QAM or 64 QAM modulation supports somewhat diferent channel planning
19. than for standard Canopy For reference PMP 100 200 Series uses 20 MHz channels Configurable on 5 MHz centers single carrier technology and 2level and 4 level FSK modulation 3 1 TOWER CHANNEL PLANNING For a single cluster of 4 APs on a tower 2 channel re use with channels on 10 MHz channel center spacing gives good performance In channel design parlance this can be stated as ABAB channel planning with no guard band needed between A and B A typical arrangement might be to use radios configured for 5480 MHz aimed north and south and radios configured for 5490 MHz aimed east and west For reference standard Canopy uses 2 channel re use with clusters of 6 APs on a tower with channel center spacing of either 25 MHz for Advantage APs or 20 MHz for non Advantage APs This is ABCABC channel planning with 5 MHz guard band between the 20 MHz channels for Advantage APs and no guard band needed for non Advantage Available channel center frequencies for each region are shown in Table 3 These vary by region due to different band edge RF specifications for example between Canada US and Europe requirements in Europe and Canada to not impinge on the frequencies between 5600 and 5650 MHz which are frequencies on which some weather radar operate Table 3 Channel Center Frequencies by Region Range of Center Frequencies Available MHz Regia on 5 MHz centers within this range inclusive us 5480 5710 Canada 5480 5595 5655
20. 23 CONFIGURATION OPTIONS RF IP DFS These systems use the Canopy Media Access Controller MAC layer Settings like Downlink Data 9 Range and Control Slots are similar to Canopy FSK radios An AP can communicate to over 200 SMs similar to a Canopy FSK AP The GUI Graphical User Interface is almost identical to Canopy s with a few additions to support OFDM specific features Network features like High Priority using DiffServ MIR CIR NAT DHCP and VLAN are available for the PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series OFDM radios and are configured in the same way as they are for the PMP 100 and 200 Series and PTP 100 Series radios DFS Dynamic Frequency Selection is provided for regulatory compliant operation in the 5 4 GHz band and is activated using the Region Code feature Two alternate frequencies can be Issue 2 September 2008 Page 8 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement configured to provide service in the unlikely case a module detects radar and triggers DFS the same as standard Canopy External Antenna Gain may need to be configured consistent with any antennas used to avoid making the system overly sensitive to radar detection Whitening technique used to avoid selt interference on Canopy FSK radios is not offered as an option on the PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series radios as whitening is not a technology appli
21. CLAIM ALL OTHER WARRANTIES EITHER EXPRESS OF IMPLIED INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO IMPLIED WARRANTIES Issue 2 September 2008 Page 39 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT MOTOROLA DOES NOT WARRANT THAT THE OPERATION OF THE SOFTWARE WILL BE UNINTERRUPTED OR ERROR FREE OR THAT DEFECTS IN THE SOFTWARE WILL BE CORRECTED NO ORAL OR WRITTEN REPRESENTATIONS MADE BY MOTOROLA OR AN AGENT THEREOF SHALL CREATE A WARRANTY OR IN ANY WAY INCREASE THE SCOPE OF THIS WARRANTY MOTOROLA DOES NOT WARRANT ANY SOFTWARE THAT HAS BEEN OPERATED IN EXCESS OF SPECIFICATIONS DAMAGED MISUSED NEGLECTED OR IMPROPERLY INSTALLED BECAUSE SOME JURISDICTIONS DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OR LIMITATION OF IMPLIED WARRANTIES THE ABOVE LIMITATIONS MAY NOT APPLY TO YOU Limitation of Remedies and Damages Regardless of whether any remedy set forth herein fails of its essential purpose IN NO EVENT SHALL MOTOROLA OR ANY OF THE LICENSORS DIRECTORS OFFICERS EMPLOYEES OR AFFILIATES OF THE FOREGOING BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR ANY CONSEQUENTIAL INCIDENTAL INDIRECT SPECIAL OR SIMILAR DAMAGES WHATSOEVER including without limitation damages for loss of business profits business interruption loss of business information and the like whether foreseeable or unforeseeable arising out of the use or in
22. Connect the affected equipment to a power outlet on a different circuit from that which the receiver is connected to Consult the dealer and or experienced radio TV technician for help To reduce potential radio interference to other users the antenna type and its gain should be chosen so its Equivalent Isotropic Radiated Power EIRP is not more than that permitted for successful communication Industry Canada Certification Numbers and the specific configurations covered are listed in Table 6 Issue 2 September 2008 Page 34 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement This device has been designed to operate with the antennas listed in Table 6 and having a maximum gain as shown in Table 6 Antennas not included in Table 6 or having a gain greater than as shown in Table 6 are strictly prohibited from use with this device Required antenna impedance is 50 ohms 6 2 3 Regulatory Requirements for CEPT Member States www cept org When operated in accordance with the instructions for use Motorola Canopy Wireless equipment operating in the 5 4 GHz bands is compliant with CEPT Recommendation 70 03 Annex 3 for Wideband Data Transmission and HIPERLANS For compliant operation in the 5 4 GHz band the transmit power EIRP from the integrated antenna or a connectorized antenna shall be no more than 0 5 W 27 dBm For EU member states RLAN
23. DEC 04 08 of 9 July End users are advised to contact the ETT to determine the latest position and obtain any appropriate licenses 6 2 9 Brazil Notification Brazil regulatory authorities have not approved these devices for operation in Brazil Until they are approved they are not available for sale in Brazil and the information in this section is provisional and preliminary For compliant operation in the 5 4 GHz band the Equivalent Isotropic Radiated Power from the integrated antenna or connectorized anteanna shall not exceed 27 dBm 0 5 W The operator is responsible for enabling the DFS feature on any Canopy 5 4 GHz radio by setting the Region Code to Brazil including after the module is reset to factory defaults Important Note This equipment operates as a secondary application so it has no rights against harmful interference even if generated by similar equipment and cannot cause harmful interference on systems operating as primary applications 6 2 10 Labeling and Disclosure Table for China The People s Republic of China requires that Motorola s products comply with China Management Methods CMM environmental regulations China Management Methods refers to the regulation Management Methods for Controlling Pollution by Electronic Information Products Two items are used to demonstrate compliance the label and the disclosure table The label is placed in a customer visible position on the product Logo 1 me
24. K Frequency Shift Keying MIB Management Information Base for SNMP OFDM Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing PIP Point to Point Backhauls PIMP Point to Mulli Point AP to SMs QAM Quadrature Amplitude Modulation aPSK Quadrature Phase Shift Keying RF Radio Frequency sM Subscriber Module Issue 2 September 2008 Page 4of41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement 12 DOCUMENT CHANGE HISTORY Issue 1 First Issue Issue 2 Significant changes for PTP 200 Series bridges BHs Products using AES encryption Release 8 4 3 features 13 FEEDBACK ON DOCUMENTATION Is this document accurate complete and clear How can it be Improved Please send your feedback on Canopy documentation to technical documentation canopywireless com 14 TECHNICAL SUPPORT Tip Don t clear the Event Log after you encounter issues it may be useful to Technical Support if you need to escalate the issue Here is the escalation path for resolution of a problem 1 Check documentation This document Canopy System Release 8 User s Guide available at hitp motorola canopywireless com supportlibrary 2 Consider checking the Canopy Community Forum at http motorola canopywireless com support communit 3 Consider checking the Canopy Knowledge Base at http motorala canopywireless com supporvknowledge 4 Escalate the problem to y
25. SMs for bandwidth requests So even with zero control slots configured the SMs can still make bandwidth requests using any unused data slots BHMs do not have settings for control slots as there is no contention on the one to one link Downlink Data Range and Control Slots should be set consistent with the results of any collocation planning done using OFDM and FSK frame calculators in section 3 5 2 on page 14 4 4 DFS AND REGULATORY PARAMETERS Dynamic Frequency Selection DFS is a requirement in several countries and regions for 5 GHz unlicensed systems to detect radar systems and avoid co channel operation DFS and other regulatory requirements drive the settings for the following parameters as discussed in this section Issue 2 September 2008 Page 18 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement Region Code Primary Frequency Alternate 1 and Alternate 2 Frequencies External Antenna Gain Release 8 4 has a new page Home gt DFS Status that shows current DFS status of all three frequencies and a DFS log of past DFS events Note unlike standard Canopy the PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series AP SM and BH do not offer Whitening as the OFDM technology obviates the need for it 4 4 1 Background and Operation The modules use region specific DFS based on the Region Code selected on the module s Configurati
26. THER PECUNIARY LOSS OR FROM ANY BREACH OF WARRANTY EVEN IF MOTOROLA HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES Some states do not allow the exclusion or limitation of incidental or consequential damages so the above exclusion or limitation may not apply to you IN NO CASE SHALL MOTOROLA S LIABILITY EXCEED THE AMOUNT YOU PAID FOR THE PRODUCT Issue 2 September 2008 Page 41 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299
27. ability to use the Software or accompanying written materials regardless of the basis of the claim and even if Motorola or a Motorola representative has been advised of the possibility of such damage Motorola s liability to you for direct damages for any cause whatsoever regardless of the basis of the form of the action will be limited to the price paid for the Software that caused the damages THIS LIMITATION WILL NOT APPLY IN CASE OF PERSONAL INJURY ONLY WHERE AND TO THE EXTENT THAT APPLICABLE LAW REQUIRES SUCH LIABILITY BECAUSE SOME JURISDICTIONS DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OR LIMITATION OF LIABILITY FOR CONSEQUENTIAL OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES THE ABOVE LIMITATION MAY NOT APPLY TO YOU Maintenance and Support Motorola shall not be responsible for maintenance or support of the software By accepting the license granted under this agreement you agree that Motorola will be under no obligation to provide any support maintenance or service in connection with the Software or any application developed by you Any maintenance and support of the Related Product will be provided under the terms of the agreement for the Related Product Transfer In the case of software designed to operate on Motorola equipment you may not transfer the Software to another party except 1 if you are an end user when you are transferring the Software together with the Motorola equipment on which it operates or 2 if you are a Motorola licensed distributor when you are tra
28. age 25 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement The default on a new unit or when the unit is reset to factory defaults is 1 4 Cyclic Prefix In most deployments 1 8 Cyclic Prefix will provide a high quality higher throughput link In cases with severe multi pathing or obstructions 1 4 Cyclic Prefix may give better overall results Procedure for setting the Cyclic Prefix 8 Set the Cyclic Prefix on the Configuration gt Radio page of both the BHM and the BHS to 1 8 before deployment Important The Cyclic Prefix must be set the same on both the BHM and the BHS If they don t match the BHS will not register to the BHM 4 During installation use Link Tests to confirm link quality per standard installation and alignment procedures 5 Ifa Link Test shows low throughput or efficiency consider changing the Cyclic Prefix to 1 4 on both the BHM and the BHS along with other standard installation troubleshooting procedures such as re aiming off axis aiming changing location raising or lowering the height of the radio adjusting Transmission Power up or down or identifying and mitigating sources of interference Issue 2 September 2008 Page 26 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement 5 Installation
29. ans that the product contains no substances in excess of the maximum concentration value for materials identified in the China Management Methods regulation Logo 2 means that the product may contain substances in excess of the maximum concentration value for materials identified in the China Management Methods regulation and has an Environmental Friendly Use Period EFUP in years fifty years in the example shown The Environmental Friendly Use Period EFUP is the period in years during which the Toxic and Hazardous Substances T amp HS contained in the Electronic Information Product EIP will not leak or mutate causing environmental pollution or bodily injury from the use of the EIP The EFUP Indicated by the Logo 2 label applies to a product and all its parts Certain field replaceable parts such as battery modules can have a different EFUP and are marked separately Issue 2 September 2008 Page 36 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement The Disclosure Table see Table 7 is intended only to communicate compliance with China requirements itis not intended to communicate compliance with EU RoHS or any other environmental requirements Table 7 Disclosure Table RH 7 7 FI P de ra EHT 4 x x o o EEE x x gt gt ER LAT m o x x o o BIRT aR o o o o
30. ation practices apply including using shielded Ethernet cable or all infrastructure cabling using drip loops providing extra cable for future use at any termination and ensuring the tower or structure is fully grounded Protective Earth PE 2 Use dielectric grease on all connections and in all RJ 45 Ethernet connectors Dielectric grease is generally available in the trade and is specially formulated so as to be uniformly non conducting The best practice is to use enough grease to fill the RJ 45 female connector and then insert the RJ 45 male connector and push the grease further into the Canopy unit and around the RJ 45 connector Excess grease can be wiped over the connector area to provide some resistance to water ingress around the connector 3 Use a 600SSC surge suppressor within 3 ft 1 m of the AP and ground it to known good ground Protective Earth PE on the tower or support structure with a 10 AWG ground strap A pole mount kit is available for mounting the 600SSC to the tower or mast The mount includes a termination point for the ground strap from the 600SSC 4 Run a 10 AWG ground strap fram the grounding lug on the AP see Figure 9 to known good ground Protective Earth PE to complete the grounding and protection of the AP The termination point on the 600SSC pole mount kit may be used for this end of procedure Issue 2 September 2008 Page 30 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel
31. atory limits for their country or region These must be set or confirmed on initial configuration and after a module is reset to factory defaults and should be confirmed after the software on a module is upgraded In most cases the operator will want to set the AP s Transmitter Output Power to the maximum allowed so as to have the greatest overall range and the greatest range for 3X operation It may be useful to reduce Transmitter Output Power when Canopy systems are located close together with good coverage given because of their proximity and full power isn t needed or in cases where an operator is trying to reduce interference from the Canopy system to other systems Each SM s Transmitter Output Power is automatically set by the AP not by the operator The AP s Auto TPC Transmit Power Control sets each SM s Transmitter Output Power to the lesser of 10 dBm the maximum allowed on the SM since it has an integrated 17 dBi antenna and a regulatory maximum EIRP of 27 dBm 27 17 10 apower level so that the received power at the AP from that SM is not greater than 60 dBm PMP 400 Series networks use Auto TPC because OFDM technology is more sensitive to large differences in power levels from SMs operating at various distances from the AP than the single carrier technology used in Canopy FSK PTP 200 Series networks do not use Auto TPC the operator sets Transmitter Output Power on the Configuration gt Radio page of both t
32. cable export control laws and regulations with respect to all such software and materials Issue 2 September 2008 Page 40 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement US Government Users If you are a US Government user then the Software is provided with RESTRICTED RIGHTS as set forth in subparagraphs c 1 and 2 of the Commercial Computer Software Restricted Rights clause at FAR 52 227 19 or subparagraph c 1 i of the Rights in Technical Data and Computer Software clause at DFARS 252 227 7013 as applicable Disputes You and Motorola hereby agree that any dispute controversy or claim except for any dispute controversy or claim involving intellectual property prior to initiation of any formal legal process will be submitted for non binding mediation prior to initiation of any formal legal process Cost of mediation will be shared equally Nothing in this Section will prevent either party from resorting to judicial proceedings if i good faith efforts to resolve the dispute under these procedures have been unsuccesstul i the dispute claim or controversy involves intellectual property or ii interim relief from a court is necessary to prevent serious and irreparable injury to that party or to others General Ilinois law governs this license The terms of this license are supplemental to any written agreement executed by b
33. cable to an OFDM signal 24 RELEASE NUMBERING Release numbering has the following meaning Release 8 2 x runs on Canopy FSK radios PMP 100 and 200 and PTP 100 Series radios Release 8 4 x does not Release 8 4 x runs on PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series OFDM radios Release 8 2 x does not Release 8 3 is not planned to be used for release numbering 25 POWER AND GROUNDING The PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series radios use a 30 VDC nominal power system instead of the 24 VDC nominal power system used previously in standard Canopy A new 30 VDC power supply is available for the CMMmicro and a new 30 VDC nominal specified and labeled as 29 5 VDC power supply is available for the SM The new 30 VDC power supplies can also be used for standard Canopy and are replacing the 24 VDC power supplies in the Canopy product line The PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series radios have slightly higher power use than Canopy FSK radios and the higher voltage is needed to carry the higher wattage on cable runs approaching the 100 meter 328 ft maximum length CMMmicro 24 VDC power supplies and the latest version of SM 24 VDC power supplies can power PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series radios for shorter runs Earlier versions of SM 24 VDC power supplies especially the earlier heavier transformers cannot The best practice is to use 30 VDC power supplies with PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series radios and avoid potential issues and cable length specific engineering Due to t
34. cifications Radio with an integrated internal antenna 18 x 18 3 dB beam 178i gain for antenna Auto TPC Transmit Power Control set by the AP to provide power leveling for close in SMs with a range of 30 to 10 dBm and a default of 10 dBm 17 dBi antenna gain plus 10 dBm transmit power gives the regulatory max 27 dBm EIRP 12 5 W DC power 2 8 lb 13 25 x 8 25 x 3 75 in hwd 1 3 kg 34 x 21 x 9 5 cm 2 7 2 Connectorized radio specifications Connectorized radio only antenna to be provided by operator N type connector 30 to 15 dBm transmit power with the factory default set to 10 dBm 12 5 W DC power Same form factor as SM 2 8 Ib 13 25 x 8 25 x 3 75 in hwd 1 3kg 34 x 21 x 9 5 cm 2 7 3 Kitted connectorized radio specifications antenna included Connectorized radio and connectorized antenna kitted together N type connector 90 sectors Antenna optimized for system coverage vs system selt interference for 90 sectors 3 dB beam pattern of 60 azimuth by 5 elevation with near in null fil 17 dBi gain for antenna 30 to 15 dBm transmit power with the factory default set to 10 dBm 17 dBi antenna gain plus 10 dBm transmit power gives the regulatory max 27 dBm EIRP 125 W DC power 13 1b 28 x 8 25 x 11 in hwd 6 kg 71 x21 x 28 cm 2 7 4 System technical details Standard Canopy temperature range of 40 C to 55 C Latency of 5 7 msec
35. e 13 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement the OFDM and FSK APs may allow collocation with no guard band 15 MHz spacing in some deployments 3 5 2 Frame Calculations and Configuration Settings Interference between collocated Canopy systems can be avoided by following two practices 1 Use a CMM This synchronizes frame start so that all collocated APs begin transmitting at the same time each 2 5 millisecond frame 2 Use the frame calculators in each module OFDM and FSK the frame calculators are different as frame details are different to select Downlink Data Range and Control Siots for each system that produce Rec SEQ Start values that are within 300 bit times This ensures that all collocated APs end transmission each frame before any collocated AP begins to receive When collocating only Canopy OFDM APs together or collocating only Canopy hardware scheduled FSK APs together the simple practice of setting the Downlink Data Range and Control Slots the same on all APs ensures they won t interfere with each other These parameters are set on the Configuration gt Radio page of the AP However due to the different physical layer between Canopy OFDM and Canopy FSK this doesn t necessarily work when collocating OFDM and FSK together You will need to use frame calculators on both the OFDM and FSK mod
36. e devices for operation in Canada Until they are approved they are not available for sale in Canada and the information in this section is provisional and preliminary This device complies with RSS 210 of Industry Canada Operation is subject to the following two conditions 1 This device may not cause harmful interference and 2 This device must accept any interference received including interference that may cause undesired operation Users should be cautioned to take note that in Canada high power radars are allocated as primary users meaning they have priority of 5650 5850 MHz and these radars could cause interference andlor damage to license exempt local area networks LELAN This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device pursuant to RSS 210 of Industry Canada These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation This equipment generates Uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and if not installed and used in accordance with these instructions may cause harmful interference to radio communications If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception which can be determined by turning the equipment on and off the user is encouraged to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures Increase the separation between the affected equipment and the unit
37. ed to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures Increase the separation between the affected equipment and the unit Connect the affected equipment to a power outlet on a different circuit from that which the receiver is connected to Consult the dealer and or experienced radio TV technician for help FOC IDs and the specific configurations covered are listed in Table 6 Issue 2 September 2008 Page 33 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement Table 6 US FCC IDs and Industry Canada Certification Numbers and Covered Configurations Foc ID Industry Frequencies Module Antenna LENS or Maximum Canada Cert Families Reflector Transmitter Number Output Power ABZ89FT7629 10 MHz channels 17 dBi connectorized centered on 5480 5440AP antenna 60 x 5 3 10dBm 5710 in 5 MHz dB beam width increments within the 5470 5725 MHz 17 dBi integrated UNII band 5440 SM antenna 18 x 18 3 10 dBm dB beam width 109W 5440 10 MHz channels 17 dBi connectorized centered on 5480 5440AP antenna 60 x 5 3 10dBm 5595 and 5655 dB beam width 5710 Mhz in 5 MHz increments within 17 dBi integrated the 5470 5725 MHz antenna 18 x 18 3 U Niibandwith 5440 SM dB beam width 10dBm 5600 5650 MHz excluded 6 2 2 Industry Canada IC Notification Industry Canada has not approved thes
38. en 5600 and 5650 MHz sometimes called the weather notch is used by some weather radar and is not allowed for use by regulations in some regions including Canada and for new equipment Europe When the Canopy module is set to one of those regions configured on the Configuration gt General page of the module it will not allow configuration of the appropriate frequencies as shown in Table 3 Even in regions where use of the spectrum between 5600 and 5650 MHz is allowed such as the US the best practice is to not use these channels if there are any other usable channels available Only use the channels in this weather notch after performing long term site surveys minimum of a week to ascertain the spectrum is clear and that there don t appear to be any weather radar in the area that will cause interference to your Canopy system 3 4 RANGE AND THROUGHPUT PLANNING PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series modules provide up to 20 Mbps aggregate throughput at distances of 1 25 mi 1 km in RF environments with clear line of sight and low background interference levels Additional performance details are shown in Table 2 on page 11 RF environments with occluded Fresnel zones or higher background interference levels may give lower but still very good performance depending on the specifics of the environment Similar to standard Canopy at any given instant any radios operating at 1X or 2X take more air time to transmit a given amount of
39. enna Table 1 shows the Motorola PMP 400 Series and PTP 200 Series products available Table 1 Products and Model Numbers DES Antenna Model Antenna Series Module or included Picture Specs Number Tee i 5405M PMP400 54GHZOFDMSM DES Integrated Yes Figwre1 271 54415M_ PMP400 54GHZOFDMSM AES Integrated Yes Figure1 271 54405MC PMP 400 54GHZOFDMSM DES Connectorized No Figwre1 272 54415MC PMP 400 54GHZOFDMSM AES Connectorized No Figure 272 5440AP PMP400 54GHZOFDMAP DES Connectorized Yes Figure2 27 3 5441AP PMP400 54GHZOFDMAP AES Connectorized Yes Figure2 27 3 S440APC PMP 400 54GHZOFDMAP DES Connectorized No Figure 1 27 2 S441APC PMP 400 5 4GHzOFDMAP AES Connectorized No Figure 27 2 5440BH PTP200 S4GHZOFDMBH DES Integrated Yes Figure1 271 5441BH PTP200 54GHZOFDMBH AES Integrated Yes Figure 271 5440BHC PTP200 54GHZOFDMBH DES Connectorized No Figure1 272 5441BHC PTP200 54GHZOFDMBH AES Connectorized No Figure1 272 a Figure 1 PMP 400 Series SM or AP PTP 200 Series BH Issue 2 September 2008 Page 6 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement Figure 2 PMP 400 AP connectorized radio and antenna A Canopy CMMmicro or CMM4 provides synchronization and power to the PMP 400 Series APs and PTP 200 Series BHMs and
40. equipment in the 5 4GHz bands is exempt from individual licensing under Commission Recommendation 2003 203 EC Contact the appropriate national administrations for details on the conditions of use for the bands in question and any exceptions that might apply Also see www ero dk for further information 10 MHz channels are used centered on 5475 to 5595 and 5655 to 5715 in 5 MHz increments This is within the 5470 to 5725 MHz U NII band with 5600 to 5650 MHz excluded Motorola Canopy Radio equipment operating in the 5470 to 5725 MHz band are categorized as Class 1 devices within the EU in accordance with ECC DEG 04 08 and are CE marked C to show compliance with the European Radio amp Telecommunications Terminal Equipment R amp TTE directive 1999 5 EC The relevant Declaration of Conformity can be found at hitp motorola canopywireless com doc php A European Commission decision implemented by Member States on 31 October 2005 makes the frequency band 5470 5725 MHz available in all EU Member States for wireless access systems Under this decision the designation of Canopy 5 4GHz products become Class 1 devices and these do not require notification under article 6 section 4 of the R amp TTE Directive Consequently these 5 4GHz products are only marked with the C symbol and may be used in any member state For further details see http europa eu invinformation_society policy radio_spectrum ref documents index_en him
41. erator may lock down a link to 2X and 1X operation or to only 1 X operation using the Dynamic Rate Adapt parameter on the SM s Configuration gt General page as shown in Figure 3 on page 15 This parameter locks down both uplink and downlink operation An operator may lock down an entire sector to 2X and 1X operation or to only 1 X operation using the Dynamic Rate Adapt parameter on the AP s Configuration gt General page This parameter locks down uplink and downlink of all links in the sector and overrides any SM 1X 2X 3X settings That is if an individual link is set for 3X operation at the SM but the sector is set for 1X operation at the AP that link and all links in the sector will be locked down to 1X operation Issue 2 September 2008 Page 15 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement Enabled Translation Bridging a OEnabled ond Untranslated ARP gees SM Isolation Dsabie ston Update Application Address T2537 M te heaps Dynamic Rate Adapt Fnabladt Pnontze IUP AUK Disabled Broadcast Multicast Destination Address LLDP Multicast D Figure 4 Dynamic Rate Adapt on AP Configuration gt General page In most cases an operator is well served to leave the setting at 1X 2X 3X and let the system automatically and dynamically choose the best rate for each link Case
42. eters Setting the Region Code All modules display a Region Code pop up on the Configuration gt General page as shown in Figure 5 On new modules trom the factory or after resetting to factory defaults the operator should set this Region Code consistent with their country or region For countries or regions not listed in the Region Code pop up set the Region Code consistent with your country s regulatory requirements For example several countries in South America follow the same DFS regulations as Brazil so in those countries the Region Code should be set to Brazil IMPORTANT Operators under regulatory requirements for DFS must ensure the new Canopy parameter Region Code is set correctly This applies to initial configuration after a module is reset to factory defaults or after a module is upgraded An AP or BHM will not transmit if the Region Code is configured to None IMPORTANT On APs or BHMs received trom the factory with Region Code set to None the operator must set the Region Cade before the module will transmit The same is true of APs and BHMS which have been reset to factory defaults Issue 2 September 2008 Page 21 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement ol sel caver Sence tacsi Sawn Tne VLAN VLAN Mamies ose Us Sti Configuration gt General 5 4GHz OFDM Access Poi
43. f 10 dBm In most regulatory regions including the US Canada and Europe PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series modules operating in the 5 4 GHz band are limited to 27 dBm EIRP Equivalent Isotropic Radiated Power This is different than the 30 dBm EIRP allowed for Canopy FSK modules Issue 2 September 2008 Page 16 0f 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement operating in the 5 4 GHz band because the regulations are for spectral power density and with half the channel size 10 MHz vs 20 MHz PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series radios are allowed half the power 27 dBm vs 30 dBm To meet 27 dBm EIRP with the connectorized 18 dBi antenna with 1 dB of cable loss that comes with the 5440AP or 5441AP or the integrated 17 dBi antenna that comes with a 5440BH or 5441BH the maximum setting allowed is 10 dBm the default since 27 17 10 la connectorized AP or BHM has been purchased and the operator has provided the antenna the Transmitter Output Power must be configured based on that antenna and consistent with local or regional regulations For example if a 5440APC is being used with a 12 dBi antenna then the maximum setting allowed to meet 27 dBm EIRP is the full 15 dBm of which the radio is capable since 27 12 15 IMPORTANT It is the responsibilty of the operator and professional installer to ensure Transmitter Output Power is set within regul
44. from the User Guides section of the Canopy Document Library htip motorola canopywireless com supportiibrary region 1 amp cat 8 This guide assumes that the reader has general RF Radio Frequency and Internet Protocol IP knowledge and background This issue Issue 2 is consistent with features provided by Canopy Release 8 4 3 Separate Release Notes for Canopy Software Release 8 4 3 are available and include open issues and other notes Previously this guide was titled PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series User Guide OFDM AP and SM It has been re titled to reflect that Release 8 4 3 supports PTP 200 Series bridges using the same technology and hardware and software platform as the PMP 400 Series products 11 ABBREVIATIONS The following abbreviations may be used in these notes 1x 1X operation with typical max aggregate up and down throughput of 7 Mbps 2 Mbps for 900 MHz 2x 2X operation with typical max aggregate up and down throughput of 14 Mbps 4 Mbps for 900 MHz 3x 3X operation with typical max aggregate up and down throughput of over 20 Mbps AP Access Point Module BH Backhaul Module either timing master or timing slave BHM Backhaul Module timing master BHS Backhaul Module timing slave CMM Cluster Management Module CNUT Canopy Network Updater Tool DFS Dynamic Frequency Selection for radar avoidance EIRP Equivalent Isotropically Radiated Power ETSI European Telecommunications Standards Institute FS
45. he BHM and the BHS PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series modules display the typical Canopy Receive Power Level due to the different modulation technique no jitter is calculated or displayed 43 DOWNLINK DATA RANGE AND CONTROL SLOTS The Downlink Data parameter on the AP s and BHM s Configuration gt General page can be set In 1 increments between 10 and 90 Standard Canopy can be set between 1 and 99 although internal calculations don t result in that extreme of slot assignment between uplink and downlink The default is 75 the same as standard Canopy Issue 2 September 2008 Page 17 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement The default Range set on the AP s Configuration gt General page is 5 miles but can be set in 1 mile increments between 1 and 10 miles The BHM performs its own ranging and so no range need be set for it If the Range is set to greater than 5 miles then the Downlink Data can be a maximum of 85 else some close in SMs won t register due to details of the Canopy scheduler For example a Range of 6 miles and a Downlink Data of 90 is not allowed Operationally ifthe Downlink Data is set to greater than 85 and the user enters a range greater than 5 miles the module will reset the Downlink Data to 85 if the range is set to greater than 5 miles
46. he full metallic connection to the tower or support structure through the AP s antenna or a connectorized BH s antenna grounding of the AP or BH and a 600SSC surge suppressor within 3 ft 1 m of the AP or BH is strongly recommended to suppress overvoltages and overcurrents such as those caused by near miss lightning APs and BHs provide a grounding lug for grounding to the tower or support structure A pole mount kit is available for the 600SSC and provides a grounding lug that can be used for terminating grounding straps from both the 600SSC and the AP 26 ADMINISTRATION SYSTEMS Standard Canopy administration systems are used to support the PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series products with the only requirement being that the administration systems must be at the appropriate release level Prizm 3 1 is the element management system for PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series products In addition to managing and monitoring Canopy modules Prizm 3 1 can be Used to update them CNUT3 1 Canopy Network Update Tool is the stand alone update tool for PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series products for operators not using Prizm Issue 2 September 2008 Page 9 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement 2 7 TECHNICAL DETAILS SPECIFICATIONS PERFORMANCE The following sections show technical details for various radio form factors 2 7 1 Integrated antenna radio spe
47. ich are hereby mutually acknowledged you and Motorola agree as follows Grant of License Subject to the following terms and conditions Motorola Inc grants to you a personal revocable non assignable non transferable non exclusive and limited license to use on a single piece of equipment only one copy of the software contained on this disk which may have been pre loaded on the equipment Software You may make two copies of the Software but only for backup archival or disaster recovery purposes On any copy you make of the Software you must reproduce and include the copyright and other proprietary rights notice contained on the copy we have furnished you of the Software Ownership Motorola or its supplier retains all ttle ownership and intellectual property rights to the Software and any copies including translations compilations derivative works including images partial copies and portions of updated works The Software is Motorola s or its supplier s confidential proprietary information This Software License Agreement does not convey to you any interest in or to the Software but only a limited right of use You agree not to disclose it or make it available to anyone without Motorola s written authorization You will exercise no less than reasonable care to protect the Software from unauthorized disclosure You agree not to disassemble decompile or reverse engineer or create derivative works of the Software except and o
48. indload than a classic Canopy module and so the stronger SMMB2 is required The SMMB2 is the mounting arm used with Canopy 900 MHz integrated APs and SMs and used with reflectors Use dielectric grease on all connections and in all RJ 45 Ethernet connectors Dielectric grease is generally available in the trade and is specially formulated so as to be uniformly non conducting The best practice is to use enough grease to fill the RJ 45 female connector and then insert the RJ 45 male connector and push the grease further into the Canopy unit and around the RJ 45 connector Excess grease can be wiped over the connector area to provide some resistance to water ingress around the connector Issue 2 September 2008 Page 31 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement The PMP 400 SM and PTP 200 BH have a ground Protective Earth lug just like the AP Although not as critical as in the case of the AP where there is metal to metal connectivity through the coax and antenna to ground the lug can be used to ground the SM for additional protection Similarly a 600SSC can be used within 3 ft 1 m of the SM or BH to provide additional protection Especially for a BH or in cases where the SM is mounted high and is more exposed or in known difficult areas for lightning consider using these two techniques to increase the radio s resistance to
49. installer can see the AP from the SM but a portion of the first Fresnel is blocked An example of NLOS is when the Issue 2 September 2008 Page 7 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement installer cannot see the AP from the SM and a portion or even much of the first Fresnel is blocked but subsequent Fresnel zones are open Figure 3 shows examples of such links Line of Sight LOS near Line of Sight nLOS Non Line of Sight NLOS Figure 3 LOS nLOS and NLOS Whereas multi pathing degrades a link in some technologies like FSK OFDM can often use mult pathing to advantage to overcome nLOS and NLOS especially in cases where the Fresnel zone is only partially blocked by buildings urban canyons or foliage OFDM tends to help especially when obstacles are near the middle of the link and less so when the obstacles are very near the SM AP or BH However attenuation through walls and trees is substantial for any use of the 5 4 GHz frequency band Even with OFDM 5 4 GHz products should not be expected to penetrate walls or extensive trees and foliage 22 APPLICATIONS Applications for the PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series systems include NLOSINLOS video surveillance in metro areas High throughput enterprise applications Extend networks into urban areas Extend networks into areas with foliage
50. l and Guidelines for Limiting Exposure to Time Varying Electric Magnetic and Electromagnetic Fields The applicable power density exposure limits from the documents referenced above are 10 Wim for RF energy in the 5 4 GHz frequency bands Peak power density in the far field of a radio frequency point source is calculated as follows P G where power density in Wim a RMS transmit power capability of the radio in W total Tx gain as a factor converted trom dB d distance from point source in m P G Rearranging terms to solve for distance yields 4n8 Table 9 shows calculated minimum separation distances d recommended distances and resulting power compliance margins for each frequency band and antenna combination Table 9 Calculated Exposure Distances and Power Compliance Margins Frequency Antenna Variable d Recom Power Band caicu mended Compliance P G 5 lated Separation Margin Distance S4GH2 Integrated 0 05W 50 Bom 20cm 10 17dBi 10dBm 17 dB Gin Conectori 0 05W 316 10 Gem 20cm 10 zed 17 dBi 10dBm 17 dB Wim Bin The Recommended Distances are chosen to give significant compliance margin in all cases They are also chosen so that an OFDM module has the same exposure distance as a Canopy module to simplify communicating and heeding exposure distances in the field These are conservative distances They are along the beam direction the direction of greatest
51. l beacon transmit mode Ifit does detect a radar signature the frequency is marked for a 30 minute non occupancy period and the module moves to its 1 alternate carrier frequency It continues this behavior through its 2 alternate carrier frequency if needed then will wait until the first frequency ends its 30 minute non occupancy period If while in operation the AP or BHM detects the radar signature it mark its current carrier frequency for a 30 minute non occupaney period and move to trying the next in ine carrier frequency Since an SM or BHS only transmits if it is receiving beacon from an AP or BHS the SMs or BHSs in the sector are also not transmitting when the AP or BHM is not transmitting The FCC and IC require DFS only on APs and BHMs Europe applies the ETSI specificiation to both APs BHMs and SMs BHSs while Brazil applies it only to APs and BHMs In the ETSI case when an SM or BHS boots it scans to see if an AP is present if it can detect a Canopy beacon If an AP or BHM is found the SM performs a channel availability check on that frequency for 1 minute monitoring for the radar signature without transmitting If no radar pulse is detected during this 1 minute the SM or BHS proceeds through normal steps to register to an AP or BHM Ifthe SM or BHS does detect radar it locks out that frequency for 30 minutes and continues scanning other frequencies in its scan list Note after an SM or BHS with DFS has seen
52. lso remarks on some that remain unchanged 4 1 LINK OPERATION 1X 2X 3X PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series products offer three levels or speeds of operation 1X 2X and 3X instead of the two levels offered by standard Canopy 3X supports a typical maximum aggregate sum of up and down throughput of over 20 Mbps at up to 1 25 mi 1 km If received power is less due to distance between the AP BHM and the SM BHS or due to obstructions or interference affects the RF environment the Canopy system will automatically and dynamically adjust links to the best operation level Distance rates and other information associated with the operation levels are shown in Table 2 on page 11 Similar to standard Canopy the system chooses its operation rate dynamically based on Canopy s internal ARQ Automatic Repeat reQuest error control method With ARQ every data slot of every frame sent over the air expect downlink broadcast is expected to be acknowledged by the receiver and if acknowledgement is not received the data is resent The sending unit monitors these resends and adjusts the operation rate accordingly A normal system may have links that move from 3X to 2X and back or 1X as the RF environment changes or links Furthermore the links operate independently and it is normal for example for the downlink to run at 3X while the uplink RF environment only supports 2X The default is for both AP BHM and SM BHS to be enabled for 3X operation An op
53. nly to the extent that such activity is expressly permitted by applicable law Termination This License is effective until terminated This License will terminate immediately without notice from Motorola or judicial resolution if you fail to comply with any provision of this License Upon such termination you must destroy the Software all accompanying written materials and all copies thereof and the sections entitled Limited Warranty Limitation of Remedies and Damages and General will survive any termination Limited Warranty Motorola warrants for a period of ninety 90 days from Motorola s or its customer s shipment of the Software to you that i the disk s on which the Software is recorded will be free from defects in materials and workmanship under normal use and i the Software under normal use will perform substantially in accordance with Motorola s published specifications for that release level of the Software The written materials are provided AS IS and without warranty of any kind Motorola s entire liability and your sole and exclusive remedy for any breach of the foregoing limited warranty will be at Motorola s option replacement of the disk s provision of downloadable patch or replacement code or refund of the unused portion of your bargained for contractual benefit up to the amount paid for this Software License THIS LIMITED WARRANTY IS THE ONLY WARRANTY PROVIDED BY MOTOROLA AND MOTOROLA AND ITS LICENSORS EXPRESSLY DIS
54. nsferring the Software either together with such Motorola equipment or are transferring the Software as a licensed duly paid for upgrade update patch new release enhancement or replacement of a prior version of the Software If you are a Motorola licensed distributor when you are transferring the Software as permitted herein you agree to transfer the Software with a license agreement having terms and conditions no less restrictive than those contained herein You may transfer all other Software not otherwise having an agreed restriction on transfer to another party However all such transfers of Software are strictly subject to the conditions precedent that the other party agrees to accept the terms and conditions of this License and you destroy any copy of the Software you do not transfer to that party You may not sublicense or otherwise transfer rent or lease the Software without our written consent You may not transfer the Software in violation of any laws regulations export controls or economic sanctions imposed by the US Government Right to Audit Motorola shall have the right to audit annually upon reasonable advance notice and during normal business hours your records and accounts to determine compliance with the terms of this Agreement Export Controls You specifically acknowledge that the software may be subject to United States and other country export control laws You shall comply strictly with all requirements of all appli
55. nt va uv se su ur bz lt Dove Song ou M 10 Base T nair Duplex 10 Baso T Ful Duplex Link Speeds S4 100 Rase T Half Dupe 4 100 Base T Full Duplex Multiplo soloctions enable Auto Negotiation Contguraton Source c banon Sye nout a E MS i Hegon Goa Webpage Ave Upc BERR sanie Ao edt Bridge Configuration nage eray tmeout 3 runea ange 28 1490 Mia Translation Bridaina BEA Figure 5 Region Code on AP Configuration gt General page An SM or BHS has both a configurable Region Code and once it registers to an AP or BHM an active Region Code Alter an SM BHS registers to an AP BHM it uses the Region of the AP BHM to determine its DFS behavior and displays the AP s or BHM s Region Code on its Home gt General Status page as shown in Figure 7 The two Region Codes should be the same in normal operation but will not be the same if for example as shown in Figure 6 and Figure 7 an SM configured with a Region Code of None has registered to an AP with a Region Code of Europe Issue 2 September 2008 Page 22 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series i ttt Canopy User Guide Supplement Configuration gt General 5 4GHz Subscriber Module 03 90 36 50 10 87 Hal es ase T Ful Dube Ain pe atte rat oirir F ane T Fa putr Aiesta nt ae tgoaesen Eronni Erann SES Figure 6 Configu
56. on gt General page By directing installers and technicians to set the Region Code correctly the operator gains confidence the module is operating according to national or regional regulations without having to deal with the details for each region Available Region Codes include Other United States Canada Europe Brazil Russia and Australia Operators in regions or countries not listed and with requirements aligned with one of the listed countries should set the Region Code to that country Operators in regions or countries with no requirements for DFS should use the Other Region Code New APs and BHMs from the factory will show a Region Code of None and will not transmit until the Region Code is set to a value other than None Canada and for new equipment Europe have requirements to avoid certain frequencies used by some weather radar To meet this requirement modules set to a Region Code of Canada or Europe will display the center channel frequencies shown in Table 3 on page 12 on the AP s and BHM s Carrier Frequency pop up and on the SM s and BHS s Frequency Scan Selection List Table 5 shows the details of DFS operation and channels available for each Region Code including whether DFS is active on the AP BHM SM BHS which DFS regulation apply and any channel restrictions Table 5 Release 84 Operation based on Region Code 5 4 GHz Region Code Center Channel AP sm Frequencies Available
57. oth parties regarding this subject and the Software Motorola is to license you under it and supersedes all previous oral or written communications between us regarding the subject except for such executed agreement It may not be modified or waived except in writing and signed by an officer or other authorized representative of each party If any provision is held invalid all other provisions shall remain valid unless such invalidity would frustrate the purpose of our agreement The failure of either party to enforce any rights granted hereunder or to take action against the other party in the event of any breach hereunder shall not be deemed a waiver by that party as to subsequent enforcement of rights or subsequent action in the event of future breaches 6 4 2 Hardware Warranty in US Motorola US offers a warranty covering a period of 1 year from the date of purchase by the customer If a product is found defective during the warranty period Motorola will repair or replace the product with the same or a similar model which may be a reconditioned unit without charge for parts or labor 65 LIMIT OF LIABILITY IN NO EVENT SHALL MOTOROLA BE LIABLE TO YOU OR ANY OTHER PARTY FOR ANY DIRECT INDIRECT GENERAL SPECIAL INCIDENTAL CONSEQUENTIAL EXEMPLARY OR OTHER DAMAGE ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE PRODUCT INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF BUSINESS PROFITS BUSINESS INTERRUPTION LOSS OF BUSINESS INFORMATION OR ANY O
58. our Canopy supplier or reseller 5 Escalate the problem to Canopy Technical Support or other designated Tier 3 technical support Worldwide Canopy Technical Support email technical support canopywireless com 1 888 605 2552 or 1 217 624 9742 Canopy Technical Support Europe email essc motorola com 44 0 1799 564680 Calls are logged 24 x 7 cases are worked Mon Fri 09 00 17 00 GMT When you send e mail or call please include as appropriate software release on each module IP addresses MAC addresses and features enabled like NAT VLAN high priority channel or GIR You may be asked to run the Support Tool on CNUT or Prizm to provide a complete network picture Issue 2 September 2008 Page 5 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement 2 Product Description PMP 400 Series networks and PTP 200 Series bridges add OFDM based Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing products to the Canopy family SMs are available with either an integrated antenna or an external N type connector on a short length of coaxial cable for connecting to a connectorized antenna APS are always connectorized and sold either with a connectorized antenna as a kit or with no antenna BHs are available with either an integrated antenna or an external N type connector on a short length of coaxial cable for connecting to a connectorized ant
59. red Region Code on SM Configuration gt General page j a Home gt General Status 5 4GHz Subserisor Module 08 00 0 50 10 07 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel Devica Typa EAGH2 Sibserber oae 000030591207 Sormare Version CANOPY 82 SVOES Safina BOOT Versor GANGPYBOOT SC Boar Type Pe FPGA Vernon oma Upe tossa Byaon Tie cost31 ovora00r hornet hadaz Ne ink DFS Norra Tanai REGISTERED VC 18 Rata X2x 20030516023 Figure 7 Active Region Code on SM Home gt General Status page The AP or BHM always operates under its manually configured Region Code the one on the Configuration gt General page and so does not show a Region Code on its Home gt General Status page Under normal operations APs and BHMs operating with DFS see Table 5 will experience an additional minute after power up or reboot before they will register any SMs or BHSs SMs and BHSs operating with DFS see Table 5 will experience an additional minute after they reboot before they will register to an AP or BHM Issue 2 September 2008 Page 23 of 41 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement It takes two reboots to set the parameters described below on a module starting from factory defaults Set the Region Code as described above Save Changes and Reboot If the module then invokes DFS based on the Region Code and frequency band a
60. rs and Covered Configurations 34 Table 7 Disclosure Table 37 Table 8 Exposure Separation Distances Table 9 Calculated Exposure Distances and Power Compliance Margins 958 List of Figures Figure 1 PMP 400 Series SM or AP PTP 200 Series BH Figure 2 PMP 400 AP connectorized radio and antenna Figure 3 LOS nLOS and NLOS Figure 4 Dynamic Rate Adapt on AP Configuration gt General page 16 Figure 5 Region Code on AP Configuration gt General page 22 Figure 6 Configured Region Code on SM Configuration gt General page 23 Figure 7 Active Region Code on SM Home gt General Status page 23 Figure 8 Alternate Frequencies and Antenna Gain on Configuration gt Radio page 24 Figure 9 Ground lug highlighted on AP 31 Issue 2 September 2008 Page 3of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement 1 Introduction This guide provides product description planning configuration and installation information specific to the PMP 400 Series networks and PTP 200 Series bridges It should be used along with the Canopy System Release 8 User Guide which covers general information including all network features RF control features and GUI Graphical User Interface features common across PMP 100 200 and 400 Series networks and PTP 100 and 200 Series bridges The Canopy System Release 8 User Guide is available
61. s shown in Table 5 the Radio Frequency Carriers and External Antenna Gain parameters will be displayed Set them as described below Save Changes and Reboot again IMPORTANT Set the Region Code Save Changes and Reboot to see the context sensitive DFS parameters Unlike with many context sensitive parameters these do not appear in the GUI with only a Save Changes Setting Radio Frequencies APs and BHMs running DFS include an option for setting up to two alternate frequencies on the Configuration gt Radio page in addition to the primary frequency as shown in Figure 8 These alternate frequencies are used in the unlikely event radar is detected and the main frequency is locked out due to DFS detection If these are left at None no backup frequencies will be used in the case of DFS detection and the AP or BHM will lock itself out from any transmission for 30 minutes If radar is detected on the main frequency either at startup or during operation a Channel Availability Check will be performed on the 1 alternate frequency betore itis then used for transmission If radar is detected on the 1 alternate frequency either during Channel Availability Check or during operation a Channel Availability Check will be performed on the 2nd alternate frequency before itis then used for transmission If radar is detected on the 2nd alternate frequency either during Channel Availabilty Check or during operation the radio
62. s when it may be useful to lock down a link to 1X include Some aiming and alignment efforts although usually aiming and alignment and link optimization work well with 3X operation allowed If you are having trouble aiming a link or getting it to register locking the link down to 2X or 1X may help in some cases Ifthe link is suspected to be oscillating between operation rates to the detriment of throughput Usually even if the link is moving rapidly between operation rates overall link throughput and sector capacity are highest if the link is left at 3X and the link can choose its own rate dynamically General link troubleshooting Note that it is useful for as many links as possible to run at 3X to provide as much capacity as possible for the sector In particular just because you want to limit throughput to an individual Subscriber does not mean you should set that link to 1X operation Use MIR Maximum Information Rate settings to cap the SM s bandwidth use but let the link run at as high an operation rate as the RF environment will allow This ensures that when transmitting data the link Uses as little air ime as possible leaving more air time for other SMs 42 TRANSMITTER OUTPUT POWER AND NO JITTER The AP BHM s Transmitter Output Power is configured on the AP BHM s Configuration gt Radio page Transmitter Output Power is settable in a range from 30 dBm to 12 dBm with a factory default setting o
63. ules as they are different frame calculators For the same Downlink Data Range and Control Slots the frame calculators give different results Use of the frame calculators is similar to the previous use when collocaling software scheduled and hardware scheduled APs Procedure 1 Finding collocation values using Frame Caleulators 1 Using the Tools gt Frame Calculator on an OFDM module enter the desired Downlink Data Range and Control Slot settings click Calculate and observe the Rec SEQ Start value 2 Using the Tools gt Frame Calculator on an FSK module enter the desired Downlink Data Range and Control Slot settings click Calculate and observe the Rec SEQ Start value 3 Iterate usually adjusting the FSK Downlink Data and the OFDM Downlink Data values by a few percent each time until the Rec SEQ Start times of all collocated modules are within 300 bit times of each other 4 Configure the OFDM modules using the resulting OFDM values and the FSK modules using the resulting FSK values end of procedure Issue 2 September 2008 Page 14 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fax 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement 4 Configuring Most Canopy Series 400 configuration items are identical or very similar to configuration items in standard FSK Canopy modules This section discusses those that are new or changed and a
64. will cease transmission unless or until the primary channel clears its 30 minute lock out The altemate frequencies configured in the AP or BHM must be included in the SM s or BHS s Frequency Scan List or the SMs BHSs can t follow their AP BHM if it switches to a new channel Additional frequencies may checked in the Frequency Scan List depending on local practices for example if an operator wants to configure an SM to only register on certain frequencies to drive a known SM to AP mapping or configure an SM to register on many frequencies so that it may find another AP to register to if its usual AP isn t available Note use site surveys and RF planning to choose alternate frequencies useful for each sector and consider testing on the alternate frequencies to ensure compatibility with the sector s RF environment Figure 8 Alternate Frequencies and Antenna Gain on Configuration gt Radio page 45 NET ANTENNA GAIN FIELD An AP SM or BH needs to know the gain of its antenna to perform DFS and Auto TPC Automatic Transmit Power Control SM only consistent with regional or national regulations The Release 8 4 3 GUI includes a Net Antenna Gain field to support this Key points about the Net Antenna Gain field include Net Antenna Gain is defined as the gain of the antenna minus the loss in the coaxial cable and connectors Issue 2 September 2008 Page 24 of 41 4Gon www 4Gon co uk info 4gon co uk Tel 44 0 1245 808195 Fa
65. x 44 0 1245 808299 PMP 400 and PTP 200 Series Canopy User Guide Supplement The Net Antenna Gain is set on the Configuration gt Radio page of each module AP SM BHM or BHS The default on a new unit or when the unit is reset to factory defaults is 17 dB The range is 0 to 35 dB An SM or BH with an integrated antenna has a Net Antenna Gain of 17 dB The antenna sold with the connectorized AP has a gain of 18 dB and cable loss of approximately 1 dB giving a Net Antenna Gain of 17 dB Any radio using DFS will use the Net Antenna Gain to appropriately adjust sensitivity to radar signals The use of DFS is determined by the Region Code setting on the Configuration gt Home page The Auto TPC used by the PMP 400 Series system takes into account the Net Antenna Gain so as not to exceed national or regional EIRP limits Procedure for setting the Net Antenna Gain 1 Ifusing a BH or SM with an integrated antenna or a connectorized AP with the connectorized antenna sold with it leave the Net Antenna Gain on the Configuration gt Radio page set to the factory default of 17 dB 2 If using another antenna set the Net Antenna Gain to the gain of the antenna minus the loss in coaxial cable and connectors Important Ensure the Net Antenna Gain is set correctly Setting it low or high can lead to either a system overly sensitive to DFS events or a system not transmitting at its full legal power 46
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